`Malala`s book banned as she represents West, not Pakistan`

The memoir written by teen Pakistani activist Malala Yousufzai was banned from all private schools in Pakistan as she represented the West and not her native country, said the head of schools` association.

Islamabad: The memoir written by teen Pakistani activist Malala Yousufzai was banned from all private schools in Pakistan as she represented the West and not her native country, said the head of schools` association.

Adeeb Javedani, the president of the All Pakistan Private Schools Management Association, said he got Malala`s book banned from the libraries of its 40,000 affiliated schools as Malala was a tool of the West, she was representing the West, not Pakistan, reported the al Jazeera.

Malala`s book - "I am Malala" – which was co-authored by her and British journalist Christina Lamb, was published in October this year and it recounts Malala`s tale of her being shot at by Taliban, her life in Swat under Taliban and her new life in Britain where she now lives and studies.

The Taliban has already threatened to attack bookshops if they stocked the book.

Calling the book as "controversial", the President of All Pakistan Private Schools Federation, Mirza Kashif said that "I am Malala" will not be included in the schools` curriculum, nor will it be stocked in school libraries.

The federation represents more than 152,000 institutions across the country.

"The federation thought we should review the book, and having reviewed it we came to the decision that the book was not suitable for our children, particularly not our students," Mirza Kashif said. "In this book are many comments that are contrary to our ideology."

Pakistan`s many elite schools are members of the federation. The government has no plan to put Malala`s book on curriculum of state schools, although it is not banned.